The Sentinel-Record

U.S., Mexico leaders to meet amid tensions

- MARK STEVENSON AND ZEKE MILLER

MEXICO CITY — The U.S.-Mexico relationsh­ip — a straightfo­rward tradeoff during the Trump administra­tion, with Mexico tamping down on migration and the U.S. not pressing on other issues — has become a wide range of disagreeme­nts over trade, foreign policy, energy and climate change.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador is to visit Washington today to meet with President Joe Biden, a month after Lopez Obrador snubbed Biden’s invitation to the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles. Mexico’s leader had demanded that Biden invite to the summit the leaders of Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela — all countries with anti-democratic regimes — and he has also called U.S. support for Ukraine “a crass error.”

On that and other issues, it’s clear Lopez Obrador is getting along much worse with Biden than with Donald Trump, who threatened Mexico, but wanted only one thing from his southern neighbor: to stop migrants from reaching the border.

“I think it is more that the Biden administra­tion has tried hard to re-institutio­nalize the relationsh­ip and restore the relationsh­ip that’s not centered solely on immigratio­n and trade. And I think as a result that leads to issues coming up that AMLO is less comfortabl­e talking about,” Andrew Rudman, director of the Mexico Institute at the Wilson Center, said, using the Spanish acronym by which Mexicans refer to the president.

U.S. officials want Lopez Obrador to retreat on his reliance on fossil fuels and his campaign to favor Mexico’s state-owned electricit­y utility at the expense of foreign-built plants powered by gas and renewable energy. Washington has filed several complaints under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement pushing Mexico to enforce environmen­tal laws and rules guaranteei­ng trade union rights.

Lopez Obrador also has angrily rejected any U.S. criticism of the killings of journalist­s in Mexico or his own efforts to weaken checks and balances in Mexico’s government. He is also angered by U.S. funding of civic and non-government­al groups in Mexico that he claims are part of the opposition.

“At the end of the day, the problem is that you have the complete mismatch in this relationsh­ip,” said Arturo Sarukhan, who served as Mexico’s ambassador to the U.S. from 2006 to 2013.

The United States “needs Mexico as a key partner on everything from ‘near shoring’ (manufactur­ing for the U.S. market) … in terms of competitiv­eness, in terms of North American energy security, energy independen­ce, energy efficiency,” Sarukhan said. “The problem is you have a Mexican president who doesn’t care about any of these things.”

What the Mexican president is interested in talking about is * inflation, which in June spiked to almost 8%. Inflation and the economic after-effects of the pandemic are leading an increasing number of Mexicans to emigrate — 22 of the 53 migrants who recently died after being abandoned by smugglers in a semi-trailer in Texas were Mexican.

“We have to look for a way to act together, help each other in controllin­g inflation,” Lopez Obrador said Friday. “That is a topic I am going to propose. We have a plan.”

Before departing for Washington on Monday, Lopez Obrador said he planned to speak to Biden about controllin­g inflation, immigratio­n and security. He said a group of business leaders, including Carlos Slim, Mexico’s wealthiest citizen, would accompany him. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Friday that the Bidens are looking forward to welcoming Lopez-Obrador and his wife at the White House.

“They will discuss a broad and deep agenda, including joint efforts on migration, food security and economic opportunit­y, and so the president looks forward to having that conversati­on,” Jean-Pierre said.

The question is how hard the Biden administra­tion is willing to push Mexico on anything.

With Republican­s like Texas Gov. Greg Abbot relentless­ly pointing at the migration issue, Mexico holds huge leverage. It is under no obligation to accept anyone returned at its border except Mexican citizens, but it has allowed the U.S. to continue to deport migrants of other nationalit­ies under Title 42 health regulation­s.

Lopez Obrador wants the U.S. to grant more work visas to Mexicans and Central Americans. While that remains a touchy issue in U.S. domestic politics, more visas could help tame clandestin­e border crossings.

Increasing such visas “would seem to be a way to resolve the labor shortage we have in this country, and also reduce some of the pressure on Mexico and Central America,” Rudman said. “So it seems like something that Lopez Obrador is for, and the Biden administra­tion might be inclined to offer.”

Sarukhan thinks Biden is in a situation similar to that of European leaders who essentiall­y outsourced immigratio­n controls on hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees and migrants to Turkey, which accepted them and prevented them from going on to Greece. The Europeans, in exchange, have had to put up with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s increasing­ly autocratic ways and foreign policy snubs, he said.

“In many ways, the Biden administra­tion is in its own Erdogan trap,” Sarukhan said.

As if to underline the parallel, the Turkish president is scheduled to visit Mexico later in July, perhaps to shore up a new kind of “non-aligned” bloc like the one that existed during the Cold War in the 1960s and ’70s.

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